Submitted by The_ZombyWoof t3_zzcvbf in movies
Great art, whether it's a novel, a painting, a piece of music, or a film, should stay with you, force you to think, maybe even haunt you.
This year I bought the Criterion Collection Edition of Two-Lane Blacktop, and I haven't thought any other movie this year nearly as much.
The film stars James Taylor, Denis Wilson, Warren Oats, Laurie Bird, a tricked out 1955 Chevrolet 150 two-door sedan and a 1970 Pontiac GTO. In fact, the cars are the real stars of the movie. Not in any wide-eyed, auto-enthusiast sense, like the 1977 Firebird of Smokey and The Bandit. That car existed only to look cool and provide some platform for Burt Reynolds and Sally Field to get it on.
No, the cars of Two-Lane Blacktop are the actual extensions of the minimally drawn characters. They provide a good portion of the soundtrack; there are large swaths of this movie with no dialogue, no music, just the hum, or roar, of those big V-8s.
The sparse plot lays mostly upon the cross-country race between the Chevy and the GTO, but it's a MacGuffin, really. There is no destination, there is no goal for these characters, they are lost souls, all of them. Lost, and going nowhere fast.
Their journey takes them from the southwest through a fictional middle America, devoid of any corporate intrusion. No large, well lit gas stations or sterile, mass-market diners on this blue-highways tour. The small towns, dingy family restaurants, ramshackle petrol stations have all seen much better days. Soon-to-be ghost towns, already inhabited by wandering and adrift spirits of The Driver, The Mechanic, GTO and The Girl.
The obvious partner piece for this film is Vanishing Point, and I think the two together are the best car movies ever made. Hell, probably in the top 50 of the best movies ever made, period.
If you are a bit tired of the big boom spectacle of so many of modern movies, the get Two-Lane Blacktop, and spend some quality, quite time existing in a world long gone. And maybe ask yourself where are you going, too.
VisibleEvidence t1_j2ayzya wrote
This movie is a perfect time capsule of 70’s car culture and a masterpiece of existentialism. Is it for everybody? Well, I once gave the remastered DVD as a gift to a friend and after they watched it he was mad at me for “pulling a joke” and “tricking them into watching it” and his wife banned me from their house permanently. If that isn’t the best recommendation for “Two Lane Blacktop” EVER, then I don’t know what is. This movie should be required viewing at every film school, on a double bill with “Breathless” (1960).